Community Project Success Factors
Two towns, A and B, each decide to start a community garden, which relies on voluntary contributions of time and effort from residents. Analyze the two scenarios below and explain why the garden in Town B is significantly more likely to succeed and be well-maintained than the garden in Town A, based on principles that sustain cooperation in collective projects.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Community Project Success Factors
A small, tight-knit community successfully maintains a volunteer-run park cleanup program with consistently high participation. In contrast, a large, anonymous online forum struggles to fund its server costs through voluntary user donations, with most users contributing nothing. Which of the following best explains the difference in contribution levels between these two scenarios?
A production process that converts hours of an input into units of an output exhibits diminishing marginal returns. This means each additional hour of input generates less additional output than the previous hour. This production process is used to derive a feasible frontier showing the trade-off between the output and free time. Which of the following best describes the geometric shape of this feasible frontier?
Designing a Successful Community Garden Initiative
Designing a Successful Community Garden Initiative
A city manager is studying different community projects to understand why some succeed while others fail. Match each scenario with the primary factor that best explains the high level of contribution to the public good.
For a group to consistently achieve high levels of contribution to a shared project, it is essential to implement a formal system of fines or penalties for individuals who do not contribute their fair share.
Analyzing a Decline in Collective Action
A manager of a large, remote software development team notices that very few engineers contribute to the team's shared code documentation. While everyone benefits from good documentation, writing it takes time away from individual coding tasks. The manager wants to encourage more contributions. Based on principles that support collective action, which of the following strategies is LEAST likely to be effective in this specific context?
Improving Participation in a Neighborhood Watch Program